the media’s obama miracle (3).pdft he m e d ia ' s o b ama m i ra cle, p a ge 1 of 11 august...
TRANSCRIPT
The Media’s Obama Miracle How Journalists Pretended There
Weren’t Any White House Scandals
EXECUTIVE SUM MARY
On October 27, 2011, former Newsweek senior editor Jonathan Alter wrote a column for
Bloomberg News headlined “Obama Miracle is White House Free of Scandal.” Alter
began: “President Barack Obama goes into the 2012 [race] with a weak economy that
may doom his re-election. But he has one asset that hasn’t received much attention: He’s
honest.”
Alter even bragged: “According to a metric created by political scientist Brendan Nyhan,
Obama set a record earlier this month for most days without a scandal of any president since
1977.” Nyhan’s methodology insisted that a president doesn’t have a scandal until The
Washington Post calls it a scandal by using the S-word, as in “the Solyndra scandal.”
This grants nearly all the power in defining what is or is not a scandal to the Washington
media elite. Congress can launch investigations, hold hearings, or otherwise make real news,
but journalists have repeatedly been ignored or dismissed the Obama scandals. (This also
helps to keep the Obama scandals from entering the satire stream of late-night comedy
shows.)
To study the media “miracle” of scandal denial, MRC analysts reviewed the coverage —
or more precisely, the stunning lack of coverage — of just a few Obama scandals and
allegations, large and small, on the morning and evening news shows of ABC, CBS, and
NBC, and found:
# Fast and Furious: The Obama Justice Department’s “Operation Fast and Furious”
encouraged American gun shops to sell weapons to Mexican drug cartels, which
backfired as Mexican gangs shot and killed Border Patrol agent Brian Terry in 2010 (as
well as many Mexican citizens) with guns they allowed to “walk.” While CBS reporter
Sharyl Attkisson filed 29 stories unspooling the scandal, ABC and NBC stayed almost
perfectly silent for many months, even as Attorney General Eric Holder admitted he had
misled Congress about when he learned of “Fast and Furious.” Only when Congress
voted to hold Holder in contempt did they discover the story, and then it was dismissed
on NBC as “vicious” and “another example of our broken politics.”
# Solyndra: In the first two months of 2002, the Big Three networks reported a stunning
198 stories on the Enron bankruptcy, often tying the fiasco to President Bush. By
comparison, since declaring bankruptcy on August 31, 2011, despite a half-billion dollars
in federal loans from the Energy Department through Obama donor connections, ABC,
CBS, and NBC filed a grand total of 24 stories on Solyndra, and barely connected it to
Obama — even as Obama told ABC he had no regrets, and even as the promise of “green
jobs” demonstrably collapsed.
# MF Global: An investment company run by former New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine (a
major Obama fundraiser) declared bankruptcy on Halloween 2011 and admitted they lost
more than a billion dollars of customer money that was supposed to be kept separately
from risky investment schemes. This scandal garnered only six full stories and 16 briefs.
Only NBC once mentioned Corzine was a Democrat. None even whispered any
connection to Obama.
# Gibson Guitar: Some scandals are less weighty, but more interesting to viewers.
Federal agents twice raided the plants of Gibson Guitar in Tennessee to investigate
whether they improperly imported wood from Madagascar and India, but waited for
almost a year before settling with the guitar maker for a $300,000 fine. No one found it
newsworthy that Gibson’s CEO is a Republican donor, while other guitar makers who
weren’t Republicans were not raided by the government over wood imports.
# Reverend Wright: After a long silence after the inauguration, as the networks
pretended Obama’s longtime reverend Jeremiah Wright didn’t exist, network stories
erupted in mid-May at the whisper of an idea that Republicans might exploit him in an
ad. But the networks offered nothing on an interview in Ed Klein’s book The Amateur,
where Reverend Wright claimed in a taped interview that Obama friends offered money
for silence.
A recent Gallup survey concluded that only 21 percent of those surveyed had confidence
in television news. As the nonpartisan Tyndall Report found, networks racked up 171 minutes
of royal-wedding coverage and 111 minutes on the Michael Jackson wrongful-death trial on
the evening news in 2011. But Obama scandal news — and hence, any notion the media act as
a watchdog or a check on government — was almost nonexistent.
THE MEDIA 'S OBAMA MIRACLE, PAGE 1 OF 11
August 2012
The Media’s Obama Miracle How Journalists Pretended There
Weren’t Any White House Scandals
BY TIM GRAHAM , D IRECTOR OF MEDIA ANALYSIS
AND GEOFFREY D ICKENS, DEPUTY RESEARCH D IRECTOR
On October 27, 2011, former Newsweek senior editor Jonathan Alter wrote a column for
Bloomberg News headlined “Obama Miracle is White House Free of Scandal.” Alter
began: “President Barack Obama goes into the 2012 [race] with a weak economy that
may doom his reelection. But he has one asset that hasn’t received much attention: He’s
honest.”
One way journalists can present Obama as honest is by avoiding the coverage of stories
which define the word “scandal.” Dana Milbank of The Washington Post was perplexed at the
charge of scandal avoidance: “I think to say the media isn’t interested in scandal is
preposterous. We love scandal. I love scandal. That’s the thing that really drives us...It’s not
an ideological thing. I think the media would love to have an Obama scandal to cover.”
But scandal coverage has long been an “ideological thing.” That begins with the assertion
that there are zero Obama scandals for journalists to cover. In the Bush years, the TV
networks and national newspapers thought most of what President Bush did was a scandal:
the Iraq war was a scandal, and so were several spinoffs (Plamegate, Abu Ghraib prisoner
humiliations, and so on). The war on terror was a scandal, from the detention and harsh
interrogations of terror suspects at Guantanamo to the monitoring of phone conversations
with terror suspects abroad.
THE MEDIA 'S OBAMA MIRACLE, PAGE 2 OF 11
Whatever Obama has done to extend this battle (after dumping the “war on terror”
mantle), from keeping Gitmo open to unleashing drone attacks — even one killing a radical-
Muslim American citizen — are no longer treated as scandalous. To study the media
“miracle” of scandal denial, MRC analysts reviewed the coverage — or more precisely, the
stunning lack of coverage — of just a few Obama scandals and allegations, large and small,
on the morning and evening news shows of ABC, CBS, and NBC.
Fast and Furious
Deaths, guns, whistle-blowers and the highest law officer in the land stonewalling a
congressional investigation are the juicy ingredients of a story network news reporters would
love to cover – if a Republican president were in office. In addition to a quiet media elite,
Obama scandals were slow to emerge because Democrats were in the congressional majority
in both houses. When Republicans took over the House of Representatives in 2011, including
Rep. Darrell Issa at the helm of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee,
the story began to change.
In 2009, under Barack Obama, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives
began “Operation Fast and Furious,” which allowed licensed gun dealers to sell weapons to
illegal straw buyers, hoping to track the guns to Mexican drug cartel leaders, with the hope
of tracking the guns as they were transferred to higher-level traffickers and key figures in
Mexican cartels, with the expectation that this would lead to arrests. But it all went wrong.
Only one network and one reporter — CBS’s Sharyl Attkisson — dared to find a scandal,
at least until the House of Representatives took the historic step of voting to hold Attorney
General Eric Holder in contempt of Congress for failing to produce documents in the scandal.
On the February 23, 2011 CBS Evening News, Attkisson
reported “December 14, 2010: the place, a dangerous smuggling
route in Arizona, not far from the border. A special tactical
border squad was on patrol when gunfire broke out and agent
Brian Terry, shown here in a training exercise, was killed....The
assault rifles found at the murder, similar to these, were traced
back to a U.S. gun shop. Where they came from and how they got
there is a scandal so large, some insiders say it surpasses the shootout at Ruby Ridge and the
deadly siege at Waco.”
THE MEDIA 'S OBAMA MIRACLE, PAGE 3 OF 11
On March 23, 2011, President Obama appeared on Univision and spoke about the
controversy. He said that neither he nor Attorney General Holder authorized Fast and
Furious. He also stated, “There may be a situation here in which a serious mistake was made,
and if that’s the case, then we’ll find out and we’ll hold somebody accountable.”
Attkisson was alone in holding the government accountable. Before the story erupted in
June of this year, she filed 29 stories and one brief on CBS. ABC had aired only one brief on
the June 15, 2011 Good Morning America. In a bizarre turn, ABC White House correspondent
Jake Tapper asked Obama about Fast and Furious in October 2011, but ABC refused to allow
any soundbite on that subject to appear on Nightline, World News or Good Morning America
(which all played clips of the interview.) Instead, on Nightline, ABC found time to air Tapper
and the President playfully discussing children’s books and the greatness of Dr. Seuss.
Even Holder’s admission on November 8, 2011, that he may have misled Congress in a
May 3 hearing didn’t shake ABC and NBC out of their slumber. In May, Holder told
Congress he’d learned of Fast and Furious just “a few weeks” beforehand. In November, he
admitted “I probably could’ve said ‘a couple of months.’” In fact, he admitted Sen. Charles
Grassley (R-Iowa) had handed him letters in person on the matter in late January. Obama
answered Tapper in the unaired ABC interview: “This is not something we were aware of in
the White House and the Attorney General, it turns out, wasn’t aware of either.”
On the November 8, 2001 CBS Evening News, Sharyl Attkisson focused on another
deception, that Holder claimed in February there was no gun-walking. Holder bizarrely
claimed under GOP questioning that his letter was somehow not false, just inaccurate: “What
I said is it contains inaccurate information...I don’t want to quibble with you, but false I think
implies people making a decision to deceive.” Why would reporters not grasp on a public
official saying it’s not a falsehood if it was unintentionally false?
NBC aired absolutely nothing on their morning and evening newscasts. NBC arrived on
the story on June 12, 2012 — 546 days after Agent Terry’s shooting. On June 20, NBC Nightly
News anchor Brian Williams began his program with the House voting to hold the Attorney
General in contempt, which forced his hand: “Washington has blown up into a caustic
partisan fight...And for those not following the complexities of all of it, it just looks like more
of our broken politics and vicious fights now out in the open.”
Williams sounded like he was angry that someone gave him a reason to cover this
scandal. “Those not following the complexities of all of it” could be defined as anyone who
relied on NBC News for reporting on the Obama administration.
THE MEDIA 'S OBAMA MIRACLE, PAGE 4 OF 11
It should be noted Chris Hansen, on the April 17, 2011 edition of NBC’s magazine show
Dateline, briefly mentioned that the ATF “as part of an undercover operation, actually
allowed hundreds of guns to be smuggled to the Mexican drug cartels.” However, Hansen
never linked Holder to the operation or even mentioned Terry’s name.
Hansen’s failure to mention Terry’s name is particularly galling considering his mother,
Josephine, repeatedly demanded Holder apologize for her son’s death, most recently after a
February 2, 2012 hearing as she called the Attorney General a “coward politician.” Josephine
Terry is not being granted the same cause celebrity status that the networks gave George W.
Bush-harassing “peace mom” Cindy Sheehan.
Only CBS put Mrs. Terry on screen, in a story on The Early Show on November 9, 2011:
“Brian loved his country. Brian was a true Marine. He was a true American. When Brian was
a Marine, he used to always say, you never leave a man behind. And, I think they are leaving
my son behind. That’s what I think. And I know that would be a disgrace to him.”
The networks offered no brickbats for Attorney General
Holder. He submitted himself to zero network TV interviews
over the last two years. It’s quite a contrast to 2007, when the
networks were loaded with hyperbole on the allegedly massive
scandal of a smattering of U.S. attorneys fired by the Bush Justice
Department. Then-Attorney General Alberto Gonzales tried to
put out the blazing story by appearing on five morning-news
shows on the same day — March 14, 2007.
Gonzales was asked 42 questions by the TV interviewers — and ten of them were about if
he would resign, including on the Fox News Channel. NBC’s Matt Lauer read from
Washington Post columnist Ruth Marcus, who accused him of being “an absentee landlord,
chronically clueless.” (In another measure of the media’s wildly varying ethical standards,
the networks didn’t air a single story when the Clinton administration fired 93 U.S. Attorneys
in 1993.)
When the networks take months and even years to acknowledge a Democratic scandal
exists, it also helps to keep the Obama scandals from entering the satire stream of late-night
comedy shows. At the White House Correspondents Dinner on February 2, 2012, ABC late-
night host Jimmy Kimmel mocked Obama from the left: “Even some of your Democrats
think you’re a pushover Mr. President...They would like to see you stick to your guns and if
you don’t have any guns, they would like to see you ask Eric Holder to get some for you.”
The networks didn’t replay the joke.
THE MEDIA 'S OBAMA MIRACLE, PAGE 5 OF 11
Solyndra
On the campaign trail in 2008, Barack Obama painted a picture of 5 million new “green
jobs” over the next decade generated by federal government loans of $15 billion a year. The
national media have been very generous in evaluating that promise: Reuters said the jobs
have been “slow to sprout.”
The Washington Post crunched the numbers in September 2011: Instead of creating 65,000
jobs, as promised, the $38 billion loan program which included Solyndra could only claim
3,545 jobs. But no one on TV noticed that, because network coverage of the “green jobs”
concept tilted in Obama’s favor. “We have gotten the message. Green-collar jobs are the wave
of the future,” co-host Diane Sawyer cheered on ABC’s Good Morning America on April 15,
2009. MRC’s Business and Media Institute found that out of 52 network stories that
mentioned the administration’s “green jobs” program, only four (eight percent) bothered to
include any critics at all.
California-based Solyndra was the first solar company to be
given a loan from the Department of Energy under President
Obama, a loan for $535 million dollars in March 2009. On August
31, 2011, Solyndra declared bankrupcy and suspended all
production, laying off 1,100 employees and sticking the
taxpayers with the bill.
In the first two months of 2002, the Big Three networks
reported a stunning 198 stories on the bankruptcy of Enron, a Houston-based energy
company. Enron CEO Ken Lay had been to the Clinton White House, but the networks
zoomed in on George W. Bush. Democrats denounced George W. Bush’s “Enronomics” and
“Enronizing” of Social Security. In the two months after its August 31 bankruptcy filing,
ABC, CBS, and NBC filed a grand total of 15 stories on Solyndra. That’s an Enron-to-
Solyndra comparison of more than 13 to 1. Since last Halloween, the networks have offered
only nine more stories (and six of them were anchor-read briefs). The last one came from CBS
on January 13.
Even when Mitt Romney made a surprise visit to stand in front of the empty Solyndra
headquarters on May 31, 2012, the networks only mentioned it in passing, offering no stories.
CBS reporter Jan Crawford asked Mitt Romney one solitary Solyndra question on CBS This
Morning on June 1.
Only ABC (on the October 3, 2011 World News) ran footage of George Stephanopoulos
asking President Obama about Solyndra, despite Obama’s casual dismissal about the failure:
THE MEDIA 'S OBAMA MIRACLE, PAGE 6 OF 11
STEPHANOPOULOS: Do you regret that?
OBAMA: No, I don’t, because if you look at the overall portfolio of loan guarantees that have
been provided, overall it’s doing well and what we always understood was that not every single
business is gonna succeed in clean energy. But if we want to compete with China, which is
pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into this space, if we want to compete with other countries
that are heavily subsidizing the industries of the future, we’ve got to make sure that our guys
here in the United States of America at least have a shot. Now, there are going to be some failures
and Solyndra is an example.
STEPHANOPOULOS: And you were getting warnings not to back that company up, not to visit?
OBAMA: Well, you know, hindsight is always 20/20.
On October 7, the same Obama administration that pledged to be the most transparent
ever engaged in a late-Friday document dump. The pile included e-mails showing a top
Obama fundraiser and Energy Department official, Steven Spinner — who had supposedly
recused himself from Solyndra’s loan application because his wife worked at a law firm
representing the solar energy company — persistently pushing his colleagues to approve the
deal.
Spinner sent e-mails demanding to know: “Any word on OMB? I have the O.V.P. [Office
of the Vice President] and W.H. [White House] breathing down my neck on this....How hard
is this? What is he waiting for?”
Even though these e-mails were sensational enough to make it onto the front-page of The
New York Times, the networks never found a moment over the long Columbus Day weekend
to mention it, just as they skipped the earlier news that Jonathan Silver, who ran the Energy
Department loan program that handed more than $500 million in taxpayer money to
Solyndra, had resigned. When two Solyndra executives took the Fifth Amendment before
Congress in September, ABC and NBC skipped that news, too, while CBS offered about 25
seconds of coverage.
As the former Newsweek editor Jonathan Alter predicted in his Obama-miracle article:
“Although it’s possible that the Solyndra LLC story will become a classic feeding frenzy,
don’t bet on it. Providing $535 million in loan guarantees to a solar-panel maker that goes
bankrupt was dumb, but so far not criminal or even unethical on the part of the
administration.” On the October 29, 2011 Today program, Washington Post editorialist
Jonathan Capehart announced the network definition of scandal: “We’re looking at the GOP
looking to scratch, trying to find a scandal in an administration that is remarkably free of
scandal.”
THE MEDIA 'S OBAMA MIRACLE, PAGE 7 OF 11
MF Global
On Halloween 2011, MF Global Holdings filed for bankruptcy with a shady mystery:
some $1.6 billion was missing from their customers’ accounts. Financial analysts blamed the
company’s CEO, Jon Corzine, a former Democratic U.S. Senator and Governor of New Jersey,
who became the center of an FBI investigation.
One reporter underlined the political problem: Corzine was “one of the leading Wall
Street fundraisers for President Obama’s campaign and suggested to investors that he might
take a top administration post if the President were re-elected...His new legal troubles,
sparked by the bankruptcy filing of his investment firm, MF Global, could complicate the
President’s efforts to raise money from the financial community given Corzine’s central role
in those efforts. A recent list of top ‘bundlers’ or elite fundraisers released by Obama’s
campaign listed Corzine in the highest category — reporting that he had raised more than
$500,000 for the campaign.”
That reporter was Michael Isikoff of NBC News – but his reporting didn’t make it to
television. The story drew six full stories and 16 anchor briefs on ABC, CBS, and NBC, but
only once was the former Democratic governor’s and senator’s party affiliation mentioned,
when Kelly O’Donnell noted it once in her December 8, 2011 report for the NBC Nightly News.
“A fallen Wall Street CEO, personally rich and politically
well-connected....New Jersey’s former Democratic Governor and
U.S. Senator Jon Corzine under oath...and under fire,” O’Donnell
announced. In between those clauses, Corzine said “I do swear....I
simply do not know where the money is or why the accounts have
not been reconciled to date.”
In their only full story on the same evening on World News,
ABC’s David Muir announced “a former political heavyweight under fire tonight. Jon
Corzine, once a U.S. Senator and governor of New Jersey, forced to explain himself to small,
everyday investors today. He was testifying on Capitol Hill, saying he has no idea where
their billion dollars in investment money went.”
On CBS Evening News, they sent correspondent Cynthia Bowers to talk to customers
whose money was stolen. She asked one man: “So if you could run into Jon Corzine today,
what would you say to him?” The man replied: “It would be a bad day for Jon Corzine.”
NBC was the only network to notice in late March that Corzine may have lied to
Congress. On March 23, Nightly News anchor Brian Williams reported: “According to a
THE MEDIA 'S OBAMA MIRACLE, PAGE 8 OF 11
congressional memo released today, another executive claims that just days before the firm
collapsed last fall, Corzine issued direct instructions to transfer $200 million from customer
accounts to a brokerage account to cover a shortfall of funds. It’s an allegation Corzine has
denied under oath. It is the latest piece in a complicated search for over a billion dollars
worth of customer money that is now just gone.”
Nowhere in this financial scandal was there a whisper of the name “Obama.”
Gibson Guitar
Then there were strange scandals that had great temporary news appeal. Take the federal
raid on Gibson Guitar plants in Memphis and Nashville on August 24, 2011 over the notion
that they were improperly importing wood from India. It wasn’t against American law, but
the feds asserted it violated an Indian law under something called the Lacey Act. Gibson had
to stop manufacturing and send workers home for the day so the feds could investigate.
Agents also raided the guitar-maker in 2009, asserting improper importation of ebony wood
from Madagascar. Both India and Madagascar found nothing wrong with Gibson. Network
coverage? Zero.
On September 7, 2011, Fox’s John Roberts reported some of the facts the other networks
skipped over:
ROBERTS: Now here’s the really interesting part. Had Gibson imported this from India as a
finished piece, it would have been perfectly legal to import. So it’s not the wood itself, it’s the
amount of manufacturing that went into it. Which has led Gibson to say that the U.S.
government, this White House, this administration wants to ship U.S. jobs overseas. There’s about
40 people here at Gibson that work on putting this together. And according to Bruce Mitchell,
who’s the lead counsel for Gibson, I talked to him yesterday. He said that whole idea flies in the
face of the President’s speech tomorrow about putting Americans back to work. Here’s what he
told me.
BRUCE MITCHELL, GIBSON CHIEF LEGAL COUNSEL: Gibson, you know, is 100 percent
American made, 100 percent American made. We’re proud of that. We export 60 percent of what
we produce in the United States. So if you take in context, and in fairness to President Obama’s
speech “Let’s Put America Back to Work.” More jobs, more exports. More exports, more jobs.
Gibson is the poster child for that.
ROBERTS: Now here is the other part of this that’s really interesting. This is exactly the same type
of wood, in exactly the same form that every other guitar manufacturer in America imports and
hasn’t yet been targeted by the federal government. Which leads some people to believe that
THE MEDIA 'S OBAMA MIRACLE, PAGE 9 OF 11
because Henry Juszkiewicz, who’s the CEO of Gibson, is a Republican and has donated heavily to
Republican candidates, whereas some of the other manufacturers are led by Democrats, that
maybe there is a political motivation to all of this.
After almost a year, the administration settled with Gibson for a $300,000 fine.
Republicans have moved to repeal the Lacey Act — passed in 1900 to prevent poaching —
which currently makes it a crime to import or take any wildlife, fish or plant in violation of a
foreign law. Before the settlement, Juszkewicz wrote in The Wall Street Journal that this kind
of government intervention explained a slow economy:
“This is an overreach of government authority and indicative of the kinds of burdens the
federal government routinely imposes on growing businesses. It also highlights a dangerous
trend: an attempt to punish even paperwork errors with criminal charges and to regulate
business activities through criminal law. Policy wonks call this ‘over-criminalization.’ I call it
a job killer.”
Wright Payoff?
The most threatening scandal of Obama’s first campaign for
president was the discovery that Obama’s minister of 20 years,
Rev. Jeremiah Wright, offered harshly anti-American sermons
where he said “God damn America,” and suggested America
deserved 9/11, that the attacks on New York and Washington
were the death-dealing terrorist chickens “coming home to
roost.”
In May, author Ed Klein revealed that for his new anti-Obama book, The Amateur, he
taped an interview with Rev. Wright, who told him, “After the media went ballistic on me, I
received an e-mail offering me money not to preach at all until after the November
presidential election...It was from one of Barack’s closest friends.”
On Fox News on May 17, Klein told Hannity that the friend Wright implicated was Eric
Whitaker, a personal friend from Harvard days who works at the University of Chicago
Hospital. He’s vacationed with the Obamas and golfs with the president. Hannity asked,
“Do you think it’s possible that Whitaker could have made that offer just independently on
his own?”
Klein said no, “Because I don’t think Whitaker would have done something as important
as that without — first of all, he was a confidante of Barack Obama’s. I mean, they were as
THE MEDIA 'S OBAMA MIRACLE, PAGE 10 OF 11
close as brothers could be. And I don’t think he would have done something as dramatic as
offering $150,000 bribe without checking with his pal, Barack, and saying, maybe we should
do something about silencing this minister.” Network coverage? Zero.
Perhaps this story is too inflammatory to accept from such a disgruntled source. But these
same networks have been eager to welcome authors with all kinds of harsh allegations about
Republican presidents. For example, in 2004 NBC’s Matt Lauer welcomed Kitty Kelley to
unload personal allegations against George W. and Laura Bush. In 1999, CBS even put an
anti-Bush author on 60 Minutes claiming Bush had been arrested for cocaine possession in
1972. That anti-Bush author, J.H. Hatfield, had been convicted in 1988 of paying a hit man
$5,000 to murder his former boss with a car bomb. CBS reported his claims anyway.
The networks wouldn’t touch allegations of a Wright hush-money offer. But CBS and
NBC each briefly sprung into action on Wright at the whisper of a chance that a Republican
would run an ad against Obama’s re-election using Rev. Wright.
On the May 22 CBS This Morning, Bob Scheiffer expressed happiness that this plot was
foiled: “You know, we saw this week, Charlie, we saw Republicans roundly denounce a plan
that some Republicans had to launch this race-baiting campaign tied — trying to tie the
President once again to Jeremiah Wright. Now we’re seeing people on the Democratic side
denouncing this, saying, wait a minute, this has gone too far.”
The media elite insisted it would be terrible if super-PAC ads raised uncomfortable
associations like Wright’s connection to Obama. But Schieffer didn’t find it terrible when his
own network ran sleazy cocaine allegations against Bush, or when NBC put on “expert” like
Kitty Kelley to make unsubstantiated attacks on Bush. The news networks, in their own
imaginations, are never as sleazy as TV ads.
Conclusion
A recent Gallup survey concluded that almost 80 percent of those surveyed did not have
confidence in television news. Part of that distrust comes from ideological bias, and part of it
comes from the media’s ratings-conscious addiction to human-interest stories and celebrity
coverage. Those two trends can combine, and demonstrate a media more intensely covering
fluff than the stuff of scandal.
As the nonpartisan Tyndall Report found, networks racked up 171 minutes of royal-
wedding coverage and 111 minutes of the Michael Jackson wrongful-death trial on the
THE MEDIA 'S OBAMA MIRACLE, PAGE 11 OF 11
evening news in 2011, Obama scandal news — and hence, any notion the media acts as a
watchdog or a check on government — was almost nonexistent.
If the networks were interested in repairing their deeply damaged public image as
watchdogs of government during Democratic administrations, they would stop this
disturbing trend of going blind, dumb, and deaf on Democratic scandals — to the point of
skipping over broadcasting their own scandal questions to the President so they can make
time to talk about Dr. Seuss books.
The Media Research Center325 South Patrick Street • Alexandria, Virginia, 22314
(703) 683-9733 • www.MRC.org
L. Brent Bozell III, President
Brent H. Baker, Vice President for Research and Publications
Richard Noyes, Research Director • Tim Graham , Director of Media Analysis
Geoffrey Dickens, Deputy Research Director
Scott Whitlock, Brad Wilmouth, Matthew Balan, Kyle Drennen,
and Matt Hadro, News Division Analysts • Michelle Humphrey, Research Associate
To schedule an interview, please contact Jeremy Little or Kevin Hollister at (703) 683-5004.